“…In the over 40 species included in the clade comprising Cambeva and Scleronema, which is sister to Trichomycterus s.s., the caudal fin is always truncate or subtruncate and there are eight rays or less in the pectoral fin, never nine (Costa et al 2020a). According to Costa et al (2020a), an apomorphic concave posterior margin of the caudal fin yielding an emarginate shape, is synapomorphic for species of the T. nigricans group (subgenus Trichomycterus), but an emarginate caudal fin is also present in T. astromycterus Reis, de Pinna & Pessali, 2020, a species with uncertain phylogenetic position (Reis et al 2020;Costa 2021). The T. nigricans group is a clade highly supported by molecular data (Costa et al 2020b), comprising T. caipora Lima, Lazzarotto & Costa, 2008, T. immaculatus (Eigenmann & Eigenmann, 1889, T. nigricans and T. santaeritae (Eigenmann, 1918) Interestingly, all of these four species also possess nine pectoral-fin rays, considered to be another synapomorphy for the T. nigricans group (Costa et al 2020a), although independently occurring in T. giganteus Lima & Costa, 2004 of the subgenus Megacambeva Costa, 2021 and T. pradensis Sarmento-Soares, Martins-Pinheiro, Aranda & Chamon, 2005 of the subgenus Psammocambeva Costa, 2021 (Costa et al 2020a, b;Costa 2021).…”